JOHANNESBURG/HARARE (Reuters) - A plan by Zimbabwe’s largest brewer to only accept hard currency amid a severe dollar shortage was thrown into doubt on Thursday after a minister said the government would not allow it to go ahead.

Delta Corporation, 40 percent owned by Anheuser-Busch Inbev, said on Wednesday that its beverages subsidiary would accept hard currency only from Jan. 4 to help it cope with a crippling shortage of U.S. dollars in Zimbabwe.

Industry and commerce minister Nqobizitha Mangaliso Ndlovu, in comments published on the Good Morning Zimbabwe news site on Thursday, said the government would not allow the plan to go ahead and would be holding talks with the company.

“I have seen it (the letter from Delta to customers advising of a new pricing structure) but I think we should be meeting them on Friday. That cannot be allowed,” Ndlovu said.

Dollar shortages have left many businesses in Zimbabwe struggling to operate and Ndlovu’s comments indicate the worsening currency crisis could drive a wedge between business and the government.

Accepting only certain forms of payment was illegal and a step taken in bad faith, Ndlovu said, but did not say which laws would be broken.

“Government is very clear that this practice is unacceptable and has to stop forthwith and if not, the law will take its course,” Ndlovu said.

“At the center of the relationship between government and business is the spirit of engagement and a two-way communication between all parties. That spirit is defeated when one of the parties decides to unilaterally pronounce decisions against both the text and spirit of agreed principles.”

Under Delta’s plan, from Jan. 4 the company would not accept payments in electronic dollars or a quasi-currency known as bond notes, which most Zimbabweans are paid in.

The dollar shortage has pushed inflation in Zimbabwe to a 10-year high and prompted shortages of basic goods six months into the term of new President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

The president had promised to fix the crisis, but his administration now faces push back from businesses over its handling of the currency crunch, just as doctors stage a nationwide strike demanding better pay and conditions.

The Southern African nation adopted the use of foreign currency, mainly the U.S. dollar, in 2009 after its own currency was beset by hyperinflation, but a severe shortage of physical notes has seen deposits in Zimbabweans’ bank accounts lose value compared with cash.

The central bank issued a quasi-currency, pegged to the dollar and known as bond notes, in a bid to fix the shortage, but this too lost value against the dollar.

Reporting by Emma Rumney in Johannesburg and Alfonce Mbizwo in Harare; Editing by Susan Fenton